Soriano's blast helps Cubs edge Cards

Apr 17, 2009 - 10:40 PM
CHICAGO (AP) -- All Alfonso Soriano needed to see was a pitch to
his liking, and that's a pretty broad category.

After striking out three times earlier Friday, Soriano golfed
Chris Perez's low slider into the left-field bleachers for a
two-run, eighth-inning homer to give the Chicago Cubs an 8-7
victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.

Perez was kicking himself for not throwing the 1-2 slider in the
dirt -- and that might have been his only chance to keep Soriano
from going deep. A notorious bad-ball hitter, Soriano has five
homers in Chicago's first 10 games and two game-winning shots
this week.

"It was very low but I like low pitches and I put a good swing
on it," Soriano said. Then he laughed and added: "Well, not only
low. I like everything. High. Inside. Away. Just throw something
close to home plate and I'll hit it."

Perhaps, but he couldn't hit anything in his first three
at-bats. He fanned each time on pitches thrown well out of the
strike zone by P.J. Walters, who was making his major-league
debut in place of injured St. Louis ace Chris Carpenter.

"I don't know this guy," Soriano said. "I think I was too
excited. I have to learn they don't want to throw too many
strikes to me, especially their first time in the big leagues. I
have to calm down."

Mission accomplished in the eighth.

"Sori's always dangerous, no matter what the situation is or
what he's done to that point," teammate Derrek Lee said. "He's
able to forget about his bad at-bats, and that's not easy. Guys
don't like to strike out and a lot of guys shorten their swing.
Not Sori. He goes for the kill."

Soriano also beat Milwaukee with a two-run, ninth-inning homer
last Sunday.

In losing for only the second time in nine games, the Cardinals
couldn't score the tying run after Carlos Marmol opened the
ninth inning by walking Colby Rasmus and hitting Albert Pujols
with a pitch.

Ryan Ludwick, who had hit two home runs off of Cubs starter
Carlos Zambrano, struck out, and pinch-hitter Khalil Greene
grounded into a game-ending double play.

"I didn't get the job done, that's all there is to it," Ludwick
said. "He threw three straight fastballs right by me."

Brian Barden had given the Cardinals a 6-5 lead in the sixth
with his second homer in two days against the Cubs. Ludwick's
second homer of the game made it 7-5 in the seventh.

Aramis Ramirez pulled the Cubs within a run in the seventh with
an RBI single, his third hit of the day.

All of St. Louis' runs came against Zambrano, who fired his
glove to the ground in frustration after allowing a single by
Skip Schumaker during the Cardinals' four-run third.

Even with Pujols doing relatively little, the Cardinals scored
14 runs in the first two games of this four-game series between
the division archrivals.

"They've got some thunder over there," Cubs manager Lou Piniella
said. "They're leading the league in hitting and runs scored and
you can see why."

Notes: Ludwick has a 20-game hitting streak and Chris Duncan an
11-game streak for the Cardinals. ... For a second consecutive
day, Milton Bradley refused to talk about the third-strike
argument that resulted in his ejection from Thursday's game.
Piniella backed his player, saying: "It didn't look like a good
pitch to me." Cardinals manager Tony La Russa's take: "I don't
know how the Cubs get away with making the comments they make
about umpires." Aside from that lone pinch-hitting appearance,
Bradley hasn't played since Sunday due to a groin injury.